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Shortly after wading through the grass, this steel-blue cricket hunter disappeared down a cicada killer hole.

This week I was surprised by a frenetic, dazzling blue
wasp inspecting shredded bark, small twigs, and miniature caverns beneath
edging stones in my butterfly garden. The speed with which this sizable hunter
(up to 1 ¼ inch) dashed about the landscape exhausted me merely by observing.
But in the case of the steel-blue cricket hunter, prey are elusive and apparently,
in this game, speed is of the essence.

Steel-blue cricket hunters cover a lot of ground during
their search for prey.

One of the primary prey items of the steel-blue cricket
hunter is the Pennsylvania field cricket. This large boisterous troubadour
often invades homes and conducts its arias from the basement in late summer and
autumn. Accounts of the steel-blue cricket hunter describe the wasp flushing the
cricket from hiding, pouncing on the victim, and delivering several stings, each
laced with potent venom that ultimately paralyzes but does not kill the prey.
The wasp then straddles the cricket and using its powerful mandibles, grasps
the cricket by its antennae and then carts it away to a subterranean lair.

With a cricket securely
tucked beneath, this cricket hunter scaled my brick siding, apparently
to gain altitude for flight to her nesting site.

The lair of the cricket hunter often adjoins the burrow
of its larger ground nesting cousin, the cicada killer wasp, which we met in a
previous episode of Bug of the Week. Existing burrows fashioned by cicada
killers serve as an atrium for cricket hunters, which construct smaller tunnels
originating from the shaft excavated by the larger wasp. Within these tunnels,
cricket hunters construct multiple cells, each of which may be provisioned with
as many as 9 crickets. The female wasp then closes the burrow using stones,
bits of wood, and other debris. However, before she leaves each cricket-filled
cell, one of the hapless victims receives a lethal gift from the female wasp:
an egg, that hatches in about a day. The tiny wasp larva feasts on its natal
host, then consumes the larder left by its mother in less than a week. After
completing development, fresh new cricket hunters emerge from their pupal
cases, escape from the earth, and begin the search for more prey.

In addition to ridding the world of crickets, steel-blue
cricket hunters and other members of the sphecid wasp clan provide important
ecosystem services as pollinators and biological control agents of insect pests,
including cutworms. For the past several weeks, my bee balm has been bustling
with sphecid wasps and bees of several varieties feeding on the nectar provided
by the flowers. Once fueled by nature’s ambrosia, these adept predators dash
away, seeking insect pests to feed their young. The next several weeks will be
excellent for watching these clever hunters at work.

A clever bee balm flower delivers a dose of pollen to the back of a sphecid wasp as it forages for nectar.

Reference

The fascinating article by David Peckham and Frank
Kurczewski entitled “Nesting behavior of Chlorion
aerarium” was used as a reference for this episode.

We thank Dr. Shrewsbury who photographed the steel-blue
cricket hunter with its prey and for providing the inspiration for this story.
To learn more about this curious wasp, please visit the web sites below: